Reform and Cultural Revolution PDF
By:James Simpson
Published on 2004 by Oxford University Press on Demand
Heralding a new era in literary studies, the Oxford English Literary History breaks the mould of traditional approaches to the canon by focusing on the contexts in which the authors wrote and how their work was shaped by the times in which they lived. Each volume offers a fresh, ground-breaking re-assessment of the authors, their works, and the events and ideas which shaped the literary voice of their age. Written by some of the leading scholars in the field, under the general-editorship of Jonathan Bate, the Oxford English Literary History is essential reading for everyone studying, teaching, and researching in English literature. Unlike most medieval literary histories, which end with the coming of the Tudors, this volume continues into the mid-sixteenth century, and registers the impact of Henry VIII's cultural revolution and the linking of Church and State after the break with Rome. Although potent traditions praise both 'Reformation' and 'Renaissance' as momentsof liberation, this book argues the reverse. Simpson shows that the emergent centralized culture narrowed and simplified the literary possibilities that had been enjoyed by late medieval writers. The consequences for literature, and even for the varieties of English in which it was written, were dramatic. From roughly 1350, where the volume starts, a wide range of literary kinds flourished, in a wide range of dialects. Many of these texts can be described as a mixed commonwealth of stylesand genres, such as Langland's Piers Plowman, Gower's Confessio Amantis, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, the dramatic 'mystery' cycles, and Malory's Works. In the sixteenth century this stylistic variety gave way to a literary practice that prized coherence and unity above all. Some kinds of writing, especially romance, survived. Others, such as Langland's brand of ecclesiology, the 'Aristotelian' politics of Gower and Hoccleve, and the feminine visionary mode of Julian of Norwich, became untenable. Religious cycle drama outlived the 1530s but was suppressed within the next forty years. Sixteenth-century writing, by figures such as Wyatt, Surrey, and the dramatist John Bale, emerges in this book as the product of profoundly divided writers, torn between their commitment to the new order and their awareness of its painful, often destructive strictures.
This Book was ranked at 31 by Google Books for keyword Theology Ecclesiology novel.
Book ID of Reform and Cultural Revolution's Books is RkjJReqIi2IC, Book which was written byJames Simpsonhave ETAG "ybB0GyBQjgY"
Book which was published by Oxford University Press on Demand since 2004 have ISBNs, ISBN 13 Code is 9780199265534 and ISBN 10 Code is 0199265534
Reading Mode in Text Status is false and Reading Mode in Image Status is true
Book which have "661 Pages" is Printed at BOOK under CategoryLiterary Criticism
Book was written in en
eBook Version Availability Status at PDF is falseand in ePub is false
Book Preview
Download Reform and Cultural Revolution PDF Free
Download Reform and Cultural Revolution Books Free
Download Reform and Cultural Revolution Free
Download Reform and Cultural Revolution PDF
Download Reform and Cultural Revolution Books
No comments:
Post a Comment